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Social Issues
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Social issues are conditions and conflicts within society that affect large groups of people and provoke debate about collective responsibility and policy responses. Students across disciplines — sociology, political science, public health, business, and the humanities — engage with these topics because they sit at the intersection of individual experience and structural power. Courses that assign papers on social issues typically ask students to think critically about how forces like gender, health, and lack of access to resources shape everyday life, and why certain problems persist despite widespread awareness of them.

The papers archived here reflect a broad range of approaches. Some examine specific contested topics such as same-sex marriage or domestic space, using sociological analysis to unpack how social norms are constructed and challenged. Others take a more applied or policy-oriented angle, exploring how social and labor issues operate within supply chain management or how economic, political, and legal factors interact with social conditions in business contexts. Still others approach social issues through cultural and artistic lenses, treating hip-hop, punk ethics, or installation art as sites where broader societal tensions become visible.

A strong essay on a social issue begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad declaration that a problem exists. Evidence drawn from research, case studies, or theoretical frameworks carries more weight than general observation. Grounding claims in specific contexts — a particular community, policy, or cultural moment — sharpens the analysis considerably. The most common pitfall is treating a social issue as self-evidently important without explaining the mechanisms that sustain it or the competing perspectives that complicate easy solutions.

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Paper High School
Western Civ. V The Philosophes
The philosophes believed that moral values and the value of life itself are enshrined in natural law and that therefore the best way to discover them is to use the scientific method.
Paper Undergraduate
Islamization of Knowledge This Work
This work seeks to examine the question of 'what is curriculum' in terms of the historical background and curriculum process and to identify effective strategies for transforming curriculum and affecting change.
Essay Doctorate
Business Economic, Political, Legal and Social Influences
Economic, Political, Legal and Social Influences on McDonalds
Research Paper Doctorate
Poverty, Welfare and Sociology Poverty:
Poverty: n. (1) being poor, need. (2) scarcity or lack. (Oxford Desk Dictionary and Thesaurus, American Edition, 1997)
Research Paper Undergraduate
Raising Arizona
The film, Raising Arizona (1987), directed by Joel Coen, was a box office success when it was released in 1987, and continues to be successful today in rental and DVD sales because it parodies family and social issues…
Paper Undergraduate
Literary response to suburbia and American culture
The fulfillment of the "American Dream" was supposed to be there, and millions of Americans certainly tried to find it in the suburbs. Like the participants in a gold rush, though, although some Americans managed to…
Paper Undergraduate
Sarah Lucas: Au Naturel (1994)
Sarah Lucas: Au Naturel (1994) and the artifice of sexuality
Thesis Undergraduate
Two Major Theorist in Corporate Social Responsibility
Howard R. Bowen was the founder of the concept of corporate social responsibility. In his book "Social Responsibility of the Businessman", Bowen argued that business was a major force that touched the lives of numerous individuals. Since business was inextricably and continuously involved in processes of judgment and decision-making, many of their proposals and assertions touched the lives of vast numbers of citizens. These included not only employees of the firm but also their families, acquaintances, and so forth. The larger the firm, therefore, the more corporate responsibility, accordingly the industry had in regards to the decisions that it formulated. Carroll connected corporate social responsibility to business education in a further way by arguing that the concept of corporate social responsibility could be still further clarified were managers to delegate ethical responsibilities to their employees and provide employees with clear-cut ethical principles. As incorporated in the modern industries, businesses structure their missions that mostly follow specific ethical principles. Home sites of all businesses tend to have some missive of ethics as their regulations. Both Carroll and Bowen shaped the 21st century business in an important way by delineating its social responsibilities. Bowen, the father of corporate social responsibility, introduced the subject as well as its importance, whilst Carroll delineated on the specificity of the construct and expended on it in its various particulars.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Benjamin Franklin's life and legacy
Benjamin Franklin was born on January 17, 1706 in Boston, Massachusetts to Josiah and Abiah Folger (Kelly 2007, the Electric Benjamin Franklin 2007). He was the 15th of Josiah's 20 children by two marriages.
Paper Undergraduate
Richmond, Virginia's economic impacts from the recession
¶ … Richmond VA been impacted by the Recession